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Italy violated rights of gay couple-ECHR (3)

New Zealander refused residence permit to be with partner

Redazione Ansa

(ANSA) - Strasbourg, June 30 - The European Court of Human Rights said Monday that Italy violated the rights of gay couple for refusing to grant a residence permit to a New Zealander who wanted to live with his Italian partner in Italy. The court ordered Rome to pay damages of 20,000 euros. The ruling will become definitive in three months if none of the parties appeal.
    The Strasbourg-based court ruled in favour of Roberto Taddeucci and Douglas McCall, Italian and New Zealand nationals, born in 1965 and 1958 respectively who now live in Amsterdam. They lived together in New Zealand until December 2003, when they decided to settle in Italy. After McCall applied for a residence permit on family grounds, the the Livorno chief of police dismissed the request in October 2004. The couple successful appealed against the decision, but the government managed to reverse the ruling.
    "The restrictive interpretation of the notion of family member constituted, for homosexual couples, an insuperable obstacle to the granting of a residence permit on family grounds," the European Court of Human Rights said. "That restrictive interpretation of the concept of family member, as applied to Mr McCall, did not take due account of the applicants' personal situation and in particular their inability to obtain a form of legal recognition of their relationship in Italy.
    "In deciding to treat homosexual couples in the same way as heterosexual couples without any spousal status, the State had breached the applicants' right not to be subjected to discrimination based on sexual orientation in the enjoyment of their rights under Article 8 of the Convention".
   

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